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Probing the active site of the sugar isomerase domain from E. coli arabinose-5-phosphate isomerase via X-ray crystallography

✍ Scribed by Louise J. Gourlay; Silvia Sommaruga; Marco Nardini; Paola Sperandeo; Gianni Dehò; Alessandra Polissi; Martino Bolognesi


Book ID
105355978
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
551 KB
Volume
19
Category
Article
ISSN
0961-8368

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) biosynthesis represents an underexploited target pathway for novel antimicrobial development to combat the emergence of multidrug‐resistant bacteria. A key player in LPS synthesis is the enzyme D‐arabinose‐5‐phosphate isomerase (API), which catalyzes the reversible isomerization of D‐ribulose‐5‐phosphate to D‐arabinose‐5‐phosphate, a precursor of 3‐deoxy‐D‐manno‐octulosonate that is an essential residue of the LPS inner core. API is composed of two main domains: an N‐terminal sugar isomerase domain (SIS) and a pair of cystathionine‐β‐synthase domains of unknown function. As the three‐dimensional structure of an enzyme is a prerequisite for the rational development of novel inhibitors, we present here the crystal structure of the SIS domain of a catalytic mutant (K59A) of E. coli
D‐arabinose‐5‐phosphate isomerase at 2.6‐Å resolution. Our structural analyses and comparisons made with other SIS domains highlight several potentially important active site residues. In particular, the crystal structure allowed us to identify a previously unpredicted His residue (H88) located at the mouth of the active site cavity as a possible catalytic residue. On the basis of such structural data, subsequently supported by biochemical and mutational experiments, we confirm the catalytic role of H88, which appears to be a generally conserved residue among two‐domain isomerases.